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Search results on "BARBARA EHRENREICH":

Term Paper # 46726 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Barbara Ehrenreich's "Nickel and Dimed", 2004.
Review and discussion of Ehrenreich's book about the lives of low-wage workers.
1,908 words (approx. 7.6 pages), 5 sources, APA, $ 60.95
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Abstract
This paper is a critical review of Barbara Ehrenreich's book, "Nickel and Dimed: On Not Getting By in America". It discusses Ehrenreich's account of her undercover experience as a non-skilled, low-wage worker, and the challenge presented in the book to minimum wage legislation and its perceived benefits. Ehrenreich's interesting assertion that low-wage workers represent the biggest, most philanthropic section of society is also discussed and explained.

From the Paper
"Low-wage earners are probably one of the most neglected sections of the American workforce. While minimum wage is a highly controversial subject and often sparks hot discussions in social and political circles, no one is really interested in the lives of the real recipients of this legislation. When an increase is made in minimum wage, the government and others are more concerned about the reaction of the employers instead of the response of the low wage section. This says a great deal about social discrimination and division that prevails in our society and which severely hurts the cause of unskilled workers."
Term Paper # 21139 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"The Feminine Mystique" by Betty Friedan and "The Hearts of Men" by Barbara Ehrenreich ), 1994.
A comparison of the feminist and sociological approaches to American society and the roles of women in the 1950s.
2,025 words (approx. 8.1 pages), 2 sources, $ 71.95
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From the Paper
"The development of the feminist movement can be traced back to the nineteenth century with growing agitation for women's suffrage and for other social changes, but as a strong political force feminism came to the fore much more recently, beginning after World War II as a result of changed perceptions on the part of women regarding their roles in society, in part because of their experiences from the war years. The history of the 1950s is examined from somewhat different perspectives by Betty Friedan in her book The Feminine Mystique, with Friedan approaching the issue as a feminist, and by Barbara Ehrenreich in The Hearts of Men, with Ehrenreich approaching the issue as a sociologist. There is considerable agreement between the two books and some disagreement which may stem from different personal experiences, perceptions, and training."
Term Paper # 12966 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Barbara Ehrenreich's "The Worst Years Of Our Lives", 1997.
Critical review of satirical essay collection on 1980s as decade of superfciality, greed, corruption and selfishness.
1,125 words (approx. 4.5 pages), 1 source, $ 39.95
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From the Paper
" Barbara Ehrenreich, in her collection of brief essays The Worst Years of Our Lives, presents the general thesis that the 1980s, the infamous Reagan era, were indeed not good years for many if not most Americans. The book argues that the 1980s comprised a decade of superficiality, corruption, deceit, selfishness, racism, sexism, and so on. In short, every false and/or destructive value which can be championed was championed in the 1980s in the United States. The corruption was shared by all to some degree, says the author, but especially flowed from the top down, specifically from the White House down.

This book of essays is comprehensive in the subjects it takes on, exploring political, social, economic, sexual and religious topics which preoccupied America during the decade in question. She shoots her arrows not only at the political.."
Term Paper # 63629 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Welcome to Cancerland", 2006.
An analysis of Barbara Ehrenreich's article about cancer support groups entitled, "Welcome to Cancerland".
945 words (approx. 3.8 pages), 1 source, APA, $ 33.95
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Abstract
This paper analyzes Barbara Ehrenreich's article which expresses the opinion that cancer support groups and programs on breast cancer survivorship, instead of providing social support for cancer patients and victims, have instead created a 'cult' in which survival of, rather than finding a cure for, cancer is encouraged and propagated.

From the Paper
"The author was critical of this issue, although her thesis did not surface in the initial part of her article. She had divided her discussion into three: the first part talked about the ordeal a woman had to go through after finding out that she has cancer; the second discussion centered on the social support groups that have been formed to accept one's victimization; and the last section provided a critical view of the 'kitschiness' of the rituals cancer patients and survivors have to go through. The organization helped readers reflect on the cult that is cancer survivorship, and clearly follow Ehrenreich's point of contention as she shifts her narrative from identification to antagonism from the very 'cult' that she had been assimilated for a short period of time."
Term Paper # 16217 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Nickel and Dimed", 2002.
A review of the book "Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting by in America" by Barbara Ehrenreich.
983 words (approx. 3.9 pages), 0 sources, $ 34.95
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Abstract
This paper examines Barbara Ehrenreich's book "Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting by in America" about her experiences in trying to live on the minimum wage. She spent a year on the road working from everything as a Wal-Mart clerk to a maid to a waitress and discovers it is nearly impossible to survive, let alone live, on $6 to $7 per hour, which is well over the $5.15 Federal minimum hourly wage. It analyzes her experiences trying to hide her education, finding cheap accomodation and living with out health insurance. The paper updates us on basic information about minimum wage regulations, welfare reform and other relevant details and makes us realize that there are a whole class of people that we see every day such as waitresses and clerks whom we take for granted.

From the Paper
"In 1996, Barbara Ehrenreich was enjoying lunch with an editor from "Harper's" magazine, and together they fleshed out an idea. Ehrenreich would write a magazine article on what it was like to be one of America's working poor. She would take a low-paying $6 or $7 per hour job, and see what it took to survive. Her basic premise for her research was "?is it really possible to make a living on the kinds of jobs currently available to unskilled people?" (Ehrenreich). The result of her research is "Nickel and Dimed." She spent a year on the road working from everything as a Wal-Mart clerk to a maid to a waitress. What she found about the working poor in America is the basis of this book."
Term Paper # 98251 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Nickel and Dimed", 2007.
A review of issues of discrimination and class distinction, as described in Barbara Ehrenreich's book, "Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting by in America."
1,746 words (approx. 7.0 pages), 1 source, MLA, $ 56.95
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Abstract
This paper identifies and discusses some of the sociological themes and ideas present in Barbara Ehrenreich's book, "Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting by in America." It describes the nation's attitude, including that of Ehrenreich, towards the working class and considers how they are treated and viewed by society. The paper looks at class distinction, education, racism, ethnicity and religion. It then explores the discrimination that thousands of Americans have to face each day.

Table of Contents:
Introduction
Looking At How the Other Half Live
The True Reality Of the American Dream
Conclusion

From the Paper
"Why does it have to take a relatively wealthy woman, who is middle-classed, well-educated, and financially cushioned, to expose the true experiences of the "working poor"? The reasons, when reading Barbara's book are, unfortunately, all too clear. "Nickel and Dimed", is an emotionally charged, authentic, and witty portrayal of Barbara's social experiment to discover the truth concerning the daily lives of almost a third of Americans who live on poor wages, in bad housing, and who face society's demeaning attitudes towards them and their families. Beginning with middle-age reluctance, Ehrenreich (explaining that she does, after all, have a degree in biology), braces herself, puts her best foot forward, and sets out to discover the reality - "The only way to find out," she writes, "was to get out there and get my hands dirty" (Barbara Ehrenreich, 2001)."
Term Paper # 95176 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Low-Income Workers, 2006.
A discussion regarding low-income workers and 'Nickel and Dimed' by Barbara Ehrenreich.
1,511 words (approx. 6.0 pages), 9 sources, MLA, $ 49.95
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Abstract
This paper takes a look at the issue of low-income workers, said to be - victims of growing prosperity in the USA. The paper reviews Barbara Ehrenreich's book 'Nickel and Dimed' which discusses this subject. According to the paper, Ehrenreich's makes a convincing case against America's self-proclaimed democratic status when it calls the country a "dictatorship" where low-wage workers "dwell in a place that is neither free nor in any way democratic".

From the Paper
"In response to severe workplace abuses witnessed by immigrants at the turn of the 20th century prompted the federal government to take some serious steps. This included the passing of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (FLSA). This and other applicable regulations were meant to ensure healthy working conditions and better wages for workers. However over the years, several violations of the provisions of FLSA have surfaced including the violations connected with record keeping. Section 11a of the legislation requires employers to maintain a record of wages, hours and other conditions at the workplace or factories. These records serve as an important tool for checking if any violations of FLSA took place and to ensure that FLSA is properly followed. However the reasons violations of record keeping are rampant is because of a lack of monetary penalties in case of violation. "
Term Paper # 16045 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
?Nickel and Dimed?, 2002.
A review of the book ?Nickel and Dimed? by Barbara Ehrenreich, her adventures into the slave wage world.
1,664 words (approx. 6.7 pages), 4 sources, MLA, $ 54.95
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Abstract
This paper examines the book ?Nickel and Dimed? by Barbara Ehrenreich which is a journal of the time spent by the author 'undercover', to see if she could lead a basic life (rent, food etc.) from earning the minimum wage in light of a welfare reform which implies that any job is better than living on government assistance. It discusses her experiences from 1998 to 2000, when she lived in three different states, Florida, Maine and Minnesota, working at $6 to $7 an hour jobs and assesses her findings. The paper brings to light general problems such as stress in the workplace and how what was an experiment for Ehrenreich is real life for so many others.

From the Paper
"Ehrenreich soon discovers that it is not easy to eke out a living from entry level positions, which is the common starting point for most welfare mothers and others on government assistance who are required to trade medical benefits and food stamps for the work force. Her first job was as a waitress, or server as they are called in the politically correct world today. Her wage is $2.13 per hour, due to the Fair Labor Standards Act, which states employers are not required to pay tipped employees any more than that. However, as she soon discovers, managers are required to make up the difference between that and the hourly minimum wage of $5.15, if wages including tips fall short of this, but few, if any ever mention this law."
Term Paper # 67109 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Nickled and Dimed, 2006.
A critical review of the book "Nickled and Dimed in America" by Barbara Ehrenreich.
2,400 words (approx. 9.6 pages), 6 sources, MLA, $ 73.95
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Abstract
This paper reviews and critiques the Barbara Ehrenreich book "Nickled and Dimed in America" about people working at low paying jobs. The paper summarizes the book, which follows Ehrenreich as she takes on a variety of minimum wage jobs across America. Then the paper discusses other literary reviews and criticisms of the book. The paper concludes with the author's personal appraisal of "Nickled and Dimed in America", which is that given America's competitive, free-enterprise economy, there is little expectation that anything will change.

From the Paper
"Barbara Ehrenreich's book shows clearly that the unskilled working people in America are at or near the poverty level. She asks two pertinent questions right off the bat: "How does anyone live on the wages available to the unskilled (and) How in particular....were the roughly four million women about to be booted into the labor market by welfare reform going to make it on $6 or $7 an hour?" (Ehrenreich 2001 1) Then answers, as we read the book is "not very well". When she concentrates on the plight of women, she becomes somewhat militant (and no wonder, given the subjects she interviews). For example, a fortyish hostess tells her: "Men run everything- we don't have a chance unless we stick together" (p. 21) As she tells about the restaurant where she worked, she more than proves her point- with the manager literally sneering at the employees in a "must attend" meeting. However, when the author walks out of that Florida job, because, as she put it, her "legs have lost interest (p. 48) she does not have to worry where her next rent check is coming from, or any of the other problems of her fellow workers- male and female in that restaurant."
Term Paper # 66939 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Blood Rites", 2005.
This paper reviews writer Barbara Ehrenreich's "Blood Rites:The Origins and History of the Passions of War", an account of war from its beginnings to today, with an emphasis on its emotional aspects.
1,860 words (approx. 7.4 pages), 0 sources, $ 59.95
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Abstract
This paper explains that Barbara Ehrenreich in her book, "Blood Rites: The Origins and History of the Passions of War" traces war's origins back to Paleolithic man's struggle against predators on the African savanna. According to the book, war soon required a symmetrical form that resembled sacrificial rites, which gradually developed into a merger of religion with militarism that transformed battle into a religious rite. The author points out, in the closing chapter, that Ehrenreich pointedly cites the horrifying figure that there have been 160 wars since World War II, which took the lives of 22 million people. The paper contends that mankind is prey, who, through its own efforts, has become a predator; thereby, society continues to prey upon itself, not for sport, but from a residue of insecurity and blood lust that no society yet has managed to suppress.

From the Paper
"The following chapters address the notion of the warrior elite. The author uses the example of General MacArthur's evocation of the long, gray line of West Pointers and Hitler's fantasy of a "race of Aryan god-men." However, the warrior elite has disappeared with the modern army, because when everyone has a gun, everyone is equal on the battlefield. The elite doesn't start wars anymore, since anyone can access the massive international arms market. Wars are free to everyone now. One example is the Russian war in Chechnya that was fought by special-forces soldiers."
Term Paper # 104093 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The Working Poor, 2008.
A personal perspective on Barbara Ehrenreich's book "Nickel and Dimed".
941 words (approx. 3.8 pages), 3 sources, APA, $ 33.95
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Abstract
In this paper, the writer discusses how his perceptions of America's working poor were greatly affected by Barbara Ehrenreich's book "Nickel and Dimed". The writer then discusses how Ehrenreich shows the exploitation of working people and the real situation of of millions of lower-income citizens. The writer also describes the unfair situation where those who give the most to America are the most exploited.

From the Paper
"In some critical respects, my perceptions of blue-collared Americans were reinforced - at least when it came to how they were treated by their employers. For instance, I knew full-well that unscrupulous employers could take advantage of uneducated and trusting working-class men and women, but some of Ehrenreich's anecdotes about her life as a faux waitress in a small Florida community were genuinely startling - even when one is cognizant of the fact that the exploitation of waitresses in the hospitality sector is pervasive and can be especially severe when immigrant waitresses are the targets (American Civil Liberties Union, para.1-8)."
Term Paper # 60764 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
?Nickel and Dimed?, 2005.
This paper discusses Barbara Ehrenreich's "Nickel and Dimed: On (Not Getting) By in America", which discusses poverty in the U.S..
1,120 words (approx. 4.5 pages), 3 sources, MLA, $ 38.95
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Abstract
This paper explains that, although the idea that success comes to all laborers who work hard is one of the most cherished aspects of American capitalist ideology, it is a myth. The author reports that, to confirm her suspected hypothesis in "Nickel and Dimed' that it was not possible to live on the minimum wage in America, reporter and professor Barbara Ehrenreich took different minimum wage jobs, in three different locations in America; in all of her jobs, she was forced to supplant her income with a second job, and even then, she was unable to get by in material terms. The paper relates that, as a solution, Ehrenreich suggests a living minimum wage and appropriate benefits even part-time workers.

From the Paper
"Many of the individuals the author met were intelligent and articulate, but life, through poor opportunities or unexpected hardship had cast them into the ranks of the minimum wage laborers, ranks that are difficult to extricate one's self from. As David Shipler has noted in his book on "The Working Poor: Invisible in America", the less income one has, the more one must plan, and even a minor unexpected expense like a child's illness for a mother with no health insurance, can cause one to 'fall'. In contrast, if hard work automatically meant success for the individual who worked hard, then the easy-living women who spend their money on copper pots and do not work would not be materially comfortable-but they are. The attack on Ehrenreich's part on capitalism, as she eviscerates the conspicuous consumption of the aspiring middle classes' new faux old homes in Maine, or the Minnesota lower middle classes orgy of buying, in the hopes of finding happiness and beauty but merely creating disorder for employees is penetrating."
Term Paper # 39590 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The "Disappearance" of the Unwanted Individual, 2002.
A comparison of works by Barbara Ehrenreich and Michael Foucault to examine the theme of 'disappearance'.
1,400 words (approx. 5.6 pages), 2 sources, $ 53.95
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Abstract
This paper shall compare and contrast the book "Nickled and Dimed" by Barbara Ehrenreich and the work "Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison" by Michael Foucault. This paper shall compare and contrast the theme of "disappearance" within these two works, where both Foucault and Ehrenreich suggest that modern society conspires to remove the significance of the unwanted individual. For Foucault, this is the prisoner and for Ehrenreich this is the female working class individual.
Term Paper # 86650 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America", 2005.
A review of Barbara Ehrenreich's article on minimum wage workers, "Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America".
900 words (approx. 3.6 pages), 1 source, $ 35.95
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Abstract
The paper describes how Barbara Ehrenreich joined the working poor of Key West. Ehrenreich describes in detail, first hand, the results of American policy reducing the welfare safety net - according to a myth of work producing an end to poverty. The paper analyzes how the world of minimum wage workers is described very well, between the lines, indicating a reality very different from what most Americans would presume. The paper further analyzes how, although many Ehrenreich writes of are women, she does not have a feminist approach. The paper concludes that Ehrenreich has taken care not to be ideological and this is the article's particular strength in describing a certain impossible reality.

From the Paper
"Barbara Ehrenreich wrote an expository article on a subject of which far more educated or well-off Americans need to be aware. The article addresses women's reality in so far as many of the people she describes happen to be women. However, a strong aspect of this article is that it does not commence from ideology, or impart more than a few points, here and there, on how Karl Marx might examine the particular sub-culture that Ehrenreich came to know."
Term Paper # 101079 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Impoverished People, 2008.
This paper examines the articles "On Compassion" by Barbara Lazear Ascher, "Serving in Florida" by Barbara Ehrenreich, and "On Dumpster Diving" by Lars Eighner.
721 words (approx. 2.9 pages), 3 sources, MLA, $ 25.95
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Abstract
The paper discusses the articles "On Compassion" by Barbara Lazear Ascher, "Serving in Florida" by Barbara Ehrenreich and "On Dumpster Diving" by Lars Eighner where the authors describe how the poor have to struggle to survive for basics, such as shelter, food and clothing. The paper relates that all three essays act as a reminder to those who do not care enough about other unfortunate human beings.

From the Paper
"As Ehrenreich finds out in her essay "Serving in Florida," even those who work full time jobs often aren't able to provide for themselves a real place to live. All of Ehrenreich's coworkers live in trailers, cars, hotels or "crowded" apartments (154). As Ehrenreich admits going through her low wage experience, she wouldn't be doing as well as she did without the deposit for housing she started with. "I'd been feeling pretty smug about my $500 efficiency, but of course it was made possible only by the $1,300 I had allotted myself for start-up costs" (Ehrenreich 155)."
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Papers [1-15] of 99 :: [Page 1 of 7]
Go to page : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 —>